Abstract

The maize genomic sequence and cDNA encoding a calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase homolog were isolated and identified. The deduced peptide (MCK2) from this cDNA shared high amino acid identity (91.2%) with maize MCK1. These two genes were physically mapped onto chromosomes by fluorescence in situ hybridization using the first introns of the genes as gene-specific probes. While the MCK1 gene was assigned to a locus on the long arm of chromosome 9, the MCK2 gene was localized to a locus on the long arm of chromosome 1. Both of these genes were expressed in roots, leaves, stems and flowers, and the expression patterns of MCK were verified by RNA in situ hybridization. These results indicated that MCK expression is temporally and spatially regulated during maize growth and development.

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